HINTON, Canada – Rain and cooler temperatures were helping firefighters battling a huge forest fire that has devastated part of the popular tourist town of Jasper in western Canada, authorities said Friday.
The blaze has ravaged a large section of Jasper National Park — Canada’s largest — which is famed for its scenic mountains, lakes, waterfalls and glaciers, drawing some 2.5 million visitors a year.
The fire has so far caused no casualties, although as many as 25,000 residents and tourists were forced to evacuate quickly starting late Monday as the conflagration suddenly spread.
Still described as out of control early Friday, the blaze has destroyed more than 36,000 hectares (90,000 acres) of land, including 30 to 50 percent of the town of Jasper.
On Friday, officials said the fire in the town had been largely contained.
“There is still some smoldering fire in town that structural crews are working to extinguish but the majority of fire activity within the town boundary has subsided,” said Parks Canada spokesman James Eastham.
Alberta provincial premier Danielle Smith had described the damage in the town as “the worst nightmare for any community.”
‘Heartbreaking’ damage
Rain and cooler temperatures in the national park will likely “keep fire behavior low for the next 72 hours,” said Parks Canada, which oversees the country’s national parks and coordinates firefighting efforts.
Authorities say it would still take “several weeks” to bring the fire under control, however.
Canada has mobilized troops to help its overtaxed fire crews, and requested 400 firefighters from Australia, New Zealand, Mexico and South Africa.
The fire entered a by-then deserted Jasper on Wednesday evening, fanned by strong winds in a region hit by severe drought and record heat in recent days.
A video circulating on social media showed the city’s streets covered in ash, with cars turned to charred carcasses and buildings reduced to rubble — images Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called “heartbreaking.”
‘Feeling of devastation’
The fire was started by lightning strikes Monday, said Parks Canada, adding that fast-moving flames had reached a height of up to 120 meters (390 feet).
Lightning strikes ignited several other forest fires across western Canada. In all, there are 170 active fires in Alberta.
Neighboring British Columbia province has also been hard-hit, with 400 active blazes, half of them still out of control.
Fifty-six new fires have been counted there just in the past 24 hours.
Climate change has left Canada increasingly vulnerable to extreme weather events.
There are fears of a repeat of 2023, the country’s worst fire year in history, when 15 million hectares were burned and more than 200,000 people had to evacuate.
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